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Mum scammed after sharing bank details online shopping while fast asleep

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Mum scammed after sharing bank details online shopping while fast asleep

Kelly Knipes, 42, has been sleepwalking since the birth of her eldest son, and soon developed parasomnia, which sees her shop online while snoozing, with the habit costing her £3,000

Kelly Snipes suffers with a rare sleeping disorder at her home (James Linsell-Clark/SWNS)

A mum with rare sleep disorder has been scammed – after filling in her bank details on a dodgy site while online shopping in her sleep.

Kelly Knipes, 42, began to notice she was sleepwalking regularly after the birth of her first child Henry in 2006. But the sleepwalking soon developed sleep shopping – a habit which has seen her splash £3k unknowingly while snoozing. Purchases including a full-sized plastic basketball court and hundreds of pounds worth of Haribo sweets.




In March, Kelly received a spam text impersonating the government, offering financial assistance for her bills. While sleeping, she gave the scammers her financial information and has since been targeted several times after she suspects they sold on her information.

Mum-of-three Kelly, who runs an events business, from Basildon, Essex, said: “I’ve had to cancel cards a few times, and I’ve had lots of people try to take money out my bank. It can be anxiety-inducing. It’s really upsetting and frustrating going to bed thinking ‘I don’t know what the night is going to lead to’.”

In 2018, Kelly was found to suffer from a condition called parasomnia. She thinks the disorder was sparked by her sleep apnea – where she stops breathing in her sleep. This forces her brain to partially wake and makes her do things while still asleep – such as browsing online shops.

Kelly has spent £3k in bizarre internet shopping sprees(James Linsell-Clark/SWNS)

In 2010, long before being diagnosed, she woke up one day to the delivery of an ‘in-ground basketball unit’ including a net, pole and backboard, bought on eBay for £100. She also bought tins of paint, books about teaching, salt and pepper pots, a Wendy house, fridges and tables.

She said by not being able to return a lot of the products, she racked up a debt of “at least” £3k – although she has thankfully paid this off now. Kelly said: “I couldn’t refund any food purchases, like the Haribos. I kept the tins of paint, and the Wendy house because when that arrived and my kids saw it I felt I couldn’t return it.

“I would never actually have to put any credit card details when when I was buying things online because it was all saved on my phone. I was racking up debt everywhere. I just think over the years, all the money just mounts.” But the disorder was more than just an online shopping habit.

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